Mallard is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Murphy is an Irish surname.
Travers is an English and Irish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Minogue is a surname of Irish origin, which is an anglicized form of the Gaelic Ó Muineog, meaning "descendant of Muineog", which is a name derived from manach ("monk"). Notable people with the surname include:
Andrews is a patronymic surname of English, Scottish, and Norse origin. At the time of the 1881 British Census, its relative frequency was highest in Dorset, followed by Wiltshire, Huntingdonshire, Worcestershire, Hampshire, Suffolk, Cambridgeshire, Devon and Somerset.
Thorne is a surname of English origin, originally referring to a thorn bush. Thorne is the 1,721st most common surname name in the United States.[1]
Rogerson is a surname. Notable people with the surname:
Murtagh is an Irish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Jameson is a patronymic surname meaning "son of James". It may also be a given name. Notable people with the name include:
Massey is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Barclay is a Scottish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Bayly is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Sweeney is a surname that is of Irish origin, derived from the Gaelic Mac Suibhne meaning "son of Suibhne". The Gaelic personal name Suibhne was originally a byname meaning "pleasant" or "well-disposed" and is associated with Clan Sweeney.
Shayne is an English language masculine given name variant of the Irish given name Shane: variant of Sean, linguistically derived from the Hebrew given name John. Shayne is also an occasional surname. People with the name Shayne include:
The surname Newton is a toponymic surname, derived from the common place name "New-town". "As nearly every county has its ... Newton," there are many independent families that share this surname.
Lawson is often an English and Scottish surname that may sometimes also be a given name.
Hume is a Scottish surname that derives from Hume Castle, Berwickshire, and its adjacent estates. The name may refer to:
Walton is a toponymic surname or placename of Anglo-Saxon origins. It derives from a place with the suffix tun and one of the prefixes wald, walesc ('foreigner') or walh. First recorded as a surname in Oxfordshire in the person of Odo de Wolton on the Hundred Rolls in 1273. People with the name include:
Aldridge is an English surname derived from a toponym. Notable people with the surname include:
Parkinson is a surname, and may refer to:
Gibbs is a surname.